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Removing stuck bullets from revolver barrel

Removing bullets stuck in revolver barrel


A good friend brought me a Ruger Speed Six Revolver yesterday with bullets stuck in barrel. It belonged to another friend of his and he had owned it over 30 years and someone gave him some ammo and apparently one had a squib load or a polluted primer and there was a bullet stuck about 1/2" below muzzle and the last one was flush with back of barrel.


My friend had tried to get them out with brass rod that did not work so he called me and I thought about it while he was inbound and came up with another idea.


I took a piece of round stock, chucked it up in lathe and turned it down about 2 1/2 inches long to where it could be inserted into the muzzle. I left a little shoulder on it so it would stop when the shoulder contacted the muzzle. The idea was to make a drill guide that would keep the drill center of the bore as I drilled a hole in the bullets.


I cut it off leaving enough for the shoulder, faced it and inserted it in 3 jaw chuck and drilled a pilot hole and eventually drilled a hole with a # 7 drill all the way through it.


I placed the drill guide in the muzzle and the #7 drill in a battery powered drill and drilled through the first bullet.


Next I tapped the hole 1/4X20 tpi and put Ed's Red in bore.


Next I inserted 1 1/2" long 1/4X20 socket head screw into the hole and the head of the socket head in a vise and started pulling on it and it finally let go with a pop and came out.


Drilled the next bullet down and repeated the above and it came out.


Drilled the third bullet down and it was much tighter so we clamped barrel in vise padded with a thick piece of leather and tapped on the front of the revolver frame under the barrel with a plastic hammer and it came out.


By this time my #7 drill quit had reached the limit of its travel and the 1/4X20 Tap had as well.


I took the guide back to the lathe and opened the No 7 hole to 1/4" with a long drill I had just purchased at the flea market that morning with a broke off nose. I reground the point and it worked like a champ. That was a good stop, this lady was selling off stuff and she let me have six drill bits, (two extra long ones) and two Craftsman steel drill gages for $5.00. One of my better flea market finds.


Went back, clamped the barrel in the padded vise jaws and inserted guide in barrel and drilled through till the drill came out the cylinder end of the barrel. Then inserted a brass rod in barrel and tapped out the last THREE bullets. They were all jacketed HPs and all came out with jackets.


Finally I ran a patch down the barrel and it was perfect as it was protected by the drill guide I had turned for the job.


My buddy took all six bullets with him and the guide to show his friend what he had and how we did it.


If I had owned a extra long 1/4X20 tap and a extra long #7 drill bit and a piece of 1/4X20 all thread or screw five inches long I would have opted for that but fortunately the drill guide saved the day and his barrel. I have never seen a long 1/4X20 tap so I assume that is not to be.


I had seen revolvers with stuck bullets all my life but it was first one I was ever asked for help with.


In looking at the wall thickness of the drill guide with the 1/4" hole drilled through it that did not leave much wall thickness and I would not have wanted to open it further.


Total time to make guide and remove all six bullets was 90 minutes
 
Although your solution was quite ingenious, the real talent is possessed by the Bozo that was able to get SIX shots off and have none leave the barrel;):eek::eek::eek:. Not the guy I want in the lane next to me at the range....or even on the highway for that matter.
 
Maybe the shooter / owner thought it was a muzzle loader , got all he needed to know from Google and went to it . Six shooter , six bullets . He didn't realize you need to rotate the cylinder .
JUST KIDDING OF COURSE .
I'd measure that barrel !
 
Maybe the shooter / owner thought it was a muzzle loader , got all he needed to know from Google and went to it . Six shooter , six bullets . He didn't realize you need to rotate the cylinder .
JUST KIDDING OF COURSE .
I'd measure that barrel !
Oh yeah mabie he didnt shoot the bullets in there mabie he pounded them in with his ram rod. :D If he shot them there must have been quite alot of gas blowback through the cylinder gap
 
Why did he stop at 6? Yes, he would have to reload the gun, but if you did not realize there was a problem by the 6th shot why didn't go all in with another 6. Basically, if you don't learn there is a problem by the second or third shot how did the light come on at the sixth.
 
Larry is more concerned about the cylinders in his race cars right now. Dont put to much pressure on him:confused:

I'm hoping he knows more about them than he does firearms.
I'd pay money to see a video taped conversation, dealing with handloading, between he and fguffey! I doubt if I would understand much of it but, it would have to be good for a few laughs.
 
I'm hoping he knows more about them than he does firearms.
I'd pay money to see a video taped conversation, dealing with handloading, between he and fguffey! I doubt if I would understand much of it but, it would have to be good for a few laughs.
LOL-- I believe Guffey is on a level all his own though. He's the only one in history to never have had any "Head Space":D
 
Removing bullets stuck in revolver barrel


A good friend brought me a Ruger Speed Six Revolver yesterday with bullets stuck in barrel. It belonged to another friend of his and he had owned it over 30 years and someone gave him some ammo and apparently one had a squib load or a polluted primer and there was a bullet stuck about 1/2" below muzzle and the last one was flush with back of barrel.


My friend had tried to get them out with brass rod that did not work so he called me and I thought about it while he was inbound and came up with another idea.


I took a piece of round stock, chucked it up in lathe and turned it down about 2 1/2 inches long to where it could be inserted into the muzzle. I left a little shoulder on it so it would stop when the shoulder contacted the muzzle. The idea was to make a drill guide that would keep the drill center of the bore as I drilled a hole in the bullets.


I cut it off leaving enough for the shoulder, faced it and inserted it in 3 jaw chuck and drilled a pilot hole and eventually drilled a hole with a # 7 drill all the way through it.


I placed the drill guide in the muzzle and the #7 drill in a battery powered drill and drilled through the first bullet.


Next I tapped the hole 1/4X20 tpi and put Ed's Red in bore.


Next I inserted 1 1/2" long 1/4X20 socket head screw into the hole and the head of the socket head in a vise and started pulling on it and it finally let go with a pop and came out.


Drilled the next bullet down and repeated the above and it came out.


Drilled the third bullet down and it was much tighter so we clamped barrel in vise padded with a thick piece of leather and tapped on the front of the revolver frame under the barrel with a plastic hammer and it came out.


By this time my #7 drill quit had reached the limit of its travel and the 1/4X20 Tap had as well.


I took the guide back to the lathe and opened the No 7 hole to 1/4" with a long drill I had just purchased at the flea market that morning with a broke off nose. I reground the point and it worked like a champ. That was a good stop, this lady was selling off stuff and she let me have six drill bits, (two extra long ones) and two Craftsman steel drill gages for $5.00. One of my better flea market finds.


Went back, clamped the barrel in the padded vise jaws and inserted guide in barrel and drilled through till the drill came out the cylinder end of the barrel. Then inserted a brass rod in barrel and tapped out the last THREE bullets. They were all jacketed HPs and all came out with jackets.


Finally I ran a patch down the barrel and it was perfect as it was protected by the drill guide I had turned for the job.


My buddy took all six bullets with him and the guide to show his friend what he had and how we did it.


If I had owned a extra long 1/4X20 tap and a extra long #7 drill bit and a piece of 1/4X20 all thread or screw five inches long I would have opted for that but fortunately the drill guide saved the day and his barrel. I have never seen a long 1/4X20 tap so I assume that is not to be.


I had seen revolvers with stuck bullets all my life but it was first one I was ever asked for help with.


In looking at the wall thickness of the drill guide with the 1/4" hole drilled through it that did not leave much wall thickness and I would not have wanted to open it further.


Total time to make guide and remove all six bullets was 90 minutes
Thinking about it mabie the guy had several rounds with only primers and no powder and thats why it didnt do more damage. Mabie when he didnt hear the bang of charged loads so he kept on shooting because he thought the others were duds and the bullet didnt move.
 
After thinking it over I wouldn't worry about the cylinder it has 6 chambers and it would be the first to expand with the pressure . But what do I know . Smile Larry
 
I was just told Saturday by my buddy that a neighbor showed him a barrel. It was a 22 that a guy kept shooting and couldn't see holes in paper. Here the bullets were stacking up in the barrel. It even split the barrel. I never heard of this before this post and my buddy telling me. I wouldn't thought a 22 would have split the barrel. Matt
 
I've heard of this happening a few times with 38's. Sometimes the thing that stops the guy from shooting any more is when a bullet sticks between the barrel and cylinder.:rolleyes: That's gotta be a tough one to remove. jd
 
I've heard of this happening a few times with 38's. Sometimes the thing that stops the guy from shooting any more is when a bullet sticks between the barrel and cylinder.:rolleyes: That's gotta be a tough one to remove. jd
Nah. Just take a rosebud to it and melt that lead right out
 
"That's gotta be a tough one to remove."

Use a brass rod to drive the projectile back into the case.

Kept a rod and brass mallet in the shooting bag when I used to shoot PPC matches to assist others who failed to get the 2.8 gr. of Bullyseye in the case under a 148 Gr HBWC. Amazing how often that would happen to folks learning how to use a progressive press.
 
Sometimes the thing that stops the guy from shooting any more is when a bullet sticks between the barrel and cylinder.:rolleyes: That's gotta be a tough one to remove. jd

That one is the easy one; the bullet is driven back into the case first. Reason? The shooter can not pull the trigger, rotate the cylinder, swing the cylinder out. Again, a shooter next to me at a range was doing everything he could do to shoot another round. I tried to help him, I drove the bullet back into the case and then swung the cylinder out. He started loading his pistol again and it was made very clear his ammo was going to be checked before he continued. No way to make friends. he got mad and loaded his stuff up and left the range.

I have a barrel from a S&W 357 Highway Patrol with 6 bullets stuck in it. The forcing cone was expanded .012" and now he has another barrel.

F. Guffey
 

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